Quantifying climatic and socioeconomic drivers of urban malaria in Surat, India: A statistical spatiotemporal modelling study
Creators
- 1. Universidad de los Andes
- 2. Barcelona Supercomputing Center
- 3. University of Chicago
- 4. Urban Health and Climate Resilience Center of Excellence
- 5. Surat Municipal Corporation
Description
Background: Cities are becoming increasingly important habitats for mosquito vectors of disease. The pronounced heterogeneity of urban landscapes challenges our understanding of the effects of climate and socioeconomic factors on mosquito-borne disease dynamics at different spatiotemporal scales. Here, we quantify the impact of climatic and socioeconomic factors on urban malaria risk, using an extensive dataset in both space and time for reported Plasmodium falciparum cases in the city of Surat, northwest India.
Methods: We analysed 10 years of monthly P falciparum cases resolved at three nested spatial resolutions (seven zones, 32 units, and 478 worker units) with a Bayesian hierarchical mixed model that incorporates the effects of population density, poverty, relative humidity, and temperature, in addition to random effects (structured and unstructured). To reduce dimensionality and avoid correlation of covariates, socioeconomic variables from survey data were summarised into main axes of variation using principal component analysis. With model selection, we identified the main drivers of spatiotemporal variation in malaria incidence rates at each of the three spatial resolutions. We also compared observations to model-fitted cases by quantifying the percentage of predictions within five discrete levels of malaria risk.
Findings: The spatial variation of urban malaria cases was stationary over time, whereby locations with high and low yearly cases remained largely consistent across years. Local socioeconomic variation could be summarised with three principal components accounting for approximately 80% of the variance. The model that incorporated local temperature and relative humidity together with two of these principal components, largely representing population density and poverty, best explained monthly malaria patterns in models formulated at the three different spatial scales. As model resolution increased, the effect size of humidity decreased, whereas those of temperature and the principal component associated with population density increased. Model predictions accurately captured aggregated total monthly cases for the city; in space-time, they more closely matched observations at the intermediate scale, with around 57% of units estimated to fall in the observed category on average across years. The mean absolute error was lower at the intermediate level, showing that this is the best aggregation level to predict the space-time dynamics of malaria incidence rates across the city with the selected model.
Interpretation: This statistical modelling framework provides a basis for development of a climate-driven early warning system for urban malaria for the units of Surat, including spatially explicit prediction of malaria risk several weeks to months in advance. Results indicate environmental and socioeconomic covariates for which further measurement at high resolution should lead to model improvement. Advanced warning combined with local surveillance and knowledge of disease hotspots within the city could inform targeted intervention as part of urban malaria elimination efforts.
Funding: US National Institutes of Health.
Data availability
Code to fit the statistical model, and for other statistical analyses, as well as climate, demographic and socioeconomic data, have been deposited at the Github site (https://github.com/biomac-lab/Paper_lancet_Surat). An agreement with the Surat Municipal Corporation, the data provider, will be required for access to the epidemiological data.Files
Quantifying-climatic-and-socioeconomic-drivers-of-urban-malaria-in-Surat-India.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1016/S2542-5196(23)00249-8
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:10081
Funding
- National Institutes of Health
- R01 AI153444–01
- Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship
- Wellcome Trust
- 226069/Z/22/Z